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User: ihtoit

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  1. mosquitoes CANNOT be controlled with biotoxins on US Beekeepers Fear For Livelihoods As Anti-Zika Toxin Kills 2.5M Bees (theguardian.com) · · Score: 4, Interesting

    they reproduce too damn fast, and with their rapid lifecycle comes the development of resistant strains.

    Now, what we do know (I learned this in junior school!) is that mosquitoes breed in stagnant water.

    How about a mechanical control method, that's been proven to work? DRAIN THE POOLS, PUDDLES, OPEN SEWERS, AND ANY OTHER BODY OF WATER WHICH DOESN'T FLOW! Problem SOLVED!

    (Fuck Monsanto et al whose business depends on shifting ludicrous amounts of the nastiest chemicals known to exist).

  2. Spaceflight is risky on Satellite Owner Says SpaceX Owes $50 Million Or Free Flight (reuters.com) · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Launching doubly so. OK this was a ground test of the engines. We still don't know what caused the explosion.

    And hey, wasn't the satellite INSURED??

  3. Re: Softare and wording problem on Sony To Boost Smartphone Batteries Because People Aren't Replacing Phones (theguardian.com) · · Score: 1

    think of a rechargeable battery as a siphon. You need a reservoir of water in the siphon or it simply won't work, because physics.

  4. I just replaced a 13 year old phone. Not because of the battery (which is the original and still lasts a WEEK on one charge), but because the carrier decided to drop 2.5G support and the SIM stopped working. I can't get a replacement SIM because nobody uses them or that level of network technology anymore. Do I REALLY need 4G to place a fucking call??

    It's fucking infuriating that I have to replace perfectly functional technology that does EXACTLY WHAT I NEED IT TO DO simply because some monkey has the need to gouge me out of money I don't have to throw at completely unnecessary "upgrades".

  5. Re:Vultures on New Ransomware Poses As A Windows Update (hothardware.com) · · Score: 1

    corporate Darwinism at its best, right there. :)

  6. Re: Hardly news.. on New Ransomware Poses As A Windows Update (hothardware.com) · · Score: 1

    oh, wow, ok, simple test: 1394 support. Windows 10? Only if you can get the legacy driver from xp to work. Linux? Plug it in and rock on.

    When you have to plug in a curse every other word, you've already lost...

  7. Re: Hardly news.. on New Ransomware Poses As A Windows Update (hothardware.com) · · Score: 1

    wow, that went sideways fast, huh?

  8. 50 hours is a weekend of play.

    Yeah, if you use meth or cocaine.

    or you're simply insomniac.

  9. Re: Facebook is still a thing? on Facebook Rolls Out Code To Nullify Adblock Plus' Workaround (techcrunch.com) · · Score: 1

    Worse! Babies!

  10. Re:Did they really have 8TB drives 62 years ago? on 8TB Drives Are Highly Reliable, Says Backblaze (yahoo.com) · · Score: 2

    yes it would be unit-days, as in nX=22858 so each drive in the array (n) had an uptime of X=22858/n. We know what n is. It's 45. Therefore, X=22858/45=~508 days. The stated MTBF of the HGST Enterprise-class drives is 2.5 million hours. That would put the expected array failure rate at 2,314 days (2.5mill. divided by array size).

    So don't be impressed, this is actually a failure report.

  11. 80GB drives also reliable on 8TB Drives Are Highly Reliable, Says Backblaze (yahoo.com) · · Score: 1

    I had a 1st Gen Seagate 80GB SATA fail last month after 11 years and change, of 24/7 daily operation and very few power-off cycles.

  12. not only did the Russians use graphite pencils prior to 1968, pencils were also used on all Mercury and Gemini flights. They were replaced with the Fisher pen for Apollo and subsequent missions while the Russians used grease pencils for a year before ordering a hundred Fisher pens in 1969. And NASA never spent a dime on space pen development, that was all Fisher's work, paid for out of his own pocket. (sources: Snopes, NASA)

  13. I'd rather use the Russian method.

  14. Re:Dragonfly Telephoto Array on Class of Large But Very Dim Galaxies Discovered (nature.com) · · Score: 1

    my cluster is a mix of telescopes and cameras, all on the same mount: a Celestron 90AZ refractor, a noname 4" reflector with a Russian spherical mirror, a JVC MiniDV camcorder, a SumVision Panther GX 5MP helium-cooled webcam (that was fun to put together!), and one or two compact digital cameras which shoot on their own for wide field or through the telescopes' focal axes for narrow field. The mount is an alt-az computer controlled homebuilt Frankenstein's Monster of an engineering abortion that somehow just works.

  15. there is no reason to prefer ink over pencil. In fact, pencil is safer because of the ever present risk of water ingress - graphite marks are impervious to it. Also, at what point do you think a ballot is going to be adjusted? When it goes into the box, that's it, it doesn't see the light of day again until it reaches the counting hall, in the interim the box itself has at least two pairs of eyes on it at ALL TIMES and the chain of custody is rigorously audited for every single box.

  16. This.

  17. Re:Hell, we're not even allowed to verify *WHO* vo on Bruce Schneier: Our Election Systems Must Be Secured If We Want To Stop Foreign Hackers (schneier.com) · · Score: 1

    ID not required in England. Just a verbal confirmation of name and address, which is indelibly checked off a list as you are being passed your ballot and directed to the polling booth. You don't need ID for postal ballots either, which IMO is where the process breaks down since postal voting is a relatively new thing, designed to cater for the lazy and the fraudster. Ever worked in a mail office?? Any idea how many envelopes one person can stick and stamp in an hour??

  18. if you're going to ask a security question, who better to ask than a security guy?

    Or are you planning on asking him for advice on spinal surgery while you're there?

  19. There are situations where technological advances do make life easier, and more accountable, and fairer for all. The democratic process is NOT such a situation. For fuck's sake, can we forget this voting computer bullshit and get back to PAPER ballots and HUMAN counters, which has been time-proven for the last two fucking millennia??

  20. Re:Actual discovery: Mass of one such galaxy on Class of Large But Very Dim Galaxies Discovered (nature.com) · · Score: 1

    Because galactic forms follow known patterns, beyond certain sizes those patterns change, so knowing the size range of those types...) you can estimate the distance first by visual observation (simply measure its apparent width) then trig it. If that matches the redshift observations (which you can measure using spectroscopy), then you're there.

  21. Re:Dragonfly Telephoto Array on Class of Large But Very Dim Galaxies Discovered (nature.com) · · Score: 1

    that is a VERY nice looking piece of kit. http://www.diyphotography.net/...

  22. who the hell wrote this? on Class of Large But Very Dim Galaxies Discovered (nature.com) · · Score: 1

    Are they aware that the City of London is only one square mile, and where the fuck is Kalamazoo?

  23. Having political opinion shoved down your throat as fact is the same thing as a street evangelist following you around with a loudhailer. It might be free speech but it is HARASSMENT when you are clearly walking away with NO INTENTION of listening.

    No. I'll go one step further. It's like a penis. It's all good having religion or a political opinion because it shows at least some awareness of the world outside your immediate bubble, and you should be rightly proud of your wang, but the SECOND you start shoving it down people's throats, conversations shall be had. In the Roman sense of the word.

  24. Re: But it's still Windows 10 on Windows 10 Anniversary Update: the Best New Features (theverge.com) · · Score: 1

    the second one. I found no need to upgrade as what I have does what I want it to do, and does it well.

  25. mod this guy hysterical, Sealy mattresses are a foot and a half thick!